Hildegarde Gertrude Frey (1891-1957), was a lifelong resident of Cleveland. She created ten Camp Fire Girls
novels when she was
between the ages of twenty-four and twenty-eight. (Her name is inexplicably spelled “Hildegard” on the novels). In 1916-1920 Frey sold the copyrights to the ten Camp Fire Girls novels to the A. L. Burt Company for perhaps $100 each.

All four of Frey’s grandparents were born in Germany, as was her father, Otto, a dry goods salesman. Frey’s mother,
born Emily Hunting in Ohio, gave birth to Hildegarde in 1891, at 6 Professor Avenue on Cleveland’s west side.
Frey graduated in 1910 from West High School, on Franklin Boulevard at West 69th Street
By Hildegarde’s high school years, the Frey family owned a house on
West 100th Street, near today’s corner with east-west Madison Avenue.

In 1919, at age 28, she entered the College for Women at Western
Reserve University (now Case Western Reserve University) in Cleveland. Her degree was a Bachelor of Science -
the college’s preparation for social work, among other careers. Of her first seventeen years after college
we know only that Frey took a first job as a secretary, then at some point began a social
service career, probably with the Cleveland Department of Public Health and Welfare.

In June 1940, at the end of the Great Depression, Frey and a colleague at the city’s
Division of Relief, William Miller, drove to nine city facilities in and around Cleveland where
work-relief men performed gardening tasks. Frey, then age forty-eight, wrote a forty-three-page typed
report on the tour, titled Work Relief Projects in Operation.

There followed a second seventeen-year period about which we again have no information.
Frey didn’t marry. She died, in 1957, at age 65.
On her death certificate her sister recorded her occupation as “social worker” and her employer as the City of Cleveland.